While a surprise to some, it’s more of an expected move by those in the tech industry. We’ve seen it coming and reacted with varying levels of trust that this decision was correct, but ultimately we’ve accepted the headphone jack’s fate. It’s Apple, after all, and the company has a history of killing things that we’ve grown accustomed to; see: physical buttons on cell phones and CD slots on laptops.

The move to proprietary charging technology may not be a surprise — Apple has an insane markup on accessories — but the shift away from corded headphones entirely could be. Apple’s new wireless ‘AirPod’ headphones connect via Bluetooth and offer a wireless listening experience. For traditionalists (or those with dead headphones) you can elect to go the corded route, only this time via Apple’s Lightning cable.

Those with expensive corded headphones can rest at ease, at least a little; Apple is shipping each new iPhone with a 3.5mm headphone jack to Lightning adapter.

It’s not ideal, but it’s a start. I mean, you are losing the only input on your iPhone if you decide to charge your headphones rather than charging it overnight. On long trips, this could prove to be an either/or scenario whereas before we didn’t have to decide.

Apple did tout a five-hour battery life though, so maybe it won’t be that big an issue.

Ultimately the move to wireless headphone is going to center on two things: connectivity and sound quality. The first has a user-friendly solution to connect with a single tap, but it’s the second we’re probably most worried about. While no one expects these to match the quality of an elite pair of headphones, I’d expect it to at least match the quality of its corded counterpart.

This shouldn’t prove to be an issue for a company that wants to appease a growing chorus of pissed off users that just lost a feature this important to them.